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2003

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Regular
Season September
21, 2003 Buffalo 7
Miami 17
Attendance: 73,458
Rick Anderson - You can put away your champagne bottles for awhile. The
Buffalo Bills just don't appear to be the going to the Super Bowl
just yet.
| Scoring
Summary |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
F |
| Buffalo |
0 |
0 |
0 |
7 |
7 |
| Miami |
0 |
7 |
3 |
7 |
17 |
|
Second Quarter
MIA TD, CHRIS CHAMBERS 12 YARD PASS FROM JAY FIEDLER (OLINDO
MARE KICK), 14:35.
Third Quarter
MIA FG, OLINDO MARE 26 YARD, 9:20.
Fourth Quarter
BUF TD, NATE CLEMENTS 54 YARD INTERCEPTION RETURN (RIAN LINDELL
KICK), 1:09.
MIA TD, RICKY WILLIAMS 1 YARD
RUN (OLINDO MARE KICK), 13:08.
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It took a Miami Dolphins manhandling to
bring the Bills and their fans back down to earth. The Bills defense was
wore down by the constant running of Dolphins super running back Ricky
Williams. The Dolphins beat the Bills 17-7 to tie Buffalo and New
England for first place in the AFC East. To make it even worse, the Bills
put on their worst performance during a nationally televised prime time
game on ESPN.
Williams constant slamming into the Bills line finally wore out the
defense that was on the field most of the night. Williams carried the ball
42 times (a Dolphin record) for 153 yards. The Bills were able to contain
him for most of the first half, but on the last Dolphin drive that ensured
the Miami victory, Williams was able to pick up more real estate and
scored the clinching touchdown.
Bills fans, who have been dazzled by the first two blowouts, thought that
the Dolphins would also be fodder for the taking. It was a wakeup call for
both the fans and the Bills players themselves. The offense seemed to be
out of synch all night and once again the Bills could not get a running
game established. The Dolphins were a brick wall the Bills just could not
penetrate.
The two defenses were locked in a 0-0 deadlock for most of the first half
until the Dolphins were finally able to crack the endzone with Jay Fiedler
hitting Chris Chambers for a 12-yard touchdown with 1:10 remaining in the
half. From there, the Bills were unable to generate anything amounting to
a offensive spark.
Fish Turn Up The Heat On Bledsoe
This was a game where the Dolphins were prepared to stop anything the
Bills threw at them. The high-powered Bills offense was completely
shutdown by the Fish, who stopped both the run and the pass. It was
probably the worst performance for Bills quarterback Drew Bledsoe since he
came to Buffalo last year.
The first two games this season were a walk in the park for Bledsoe, who
had all the time in the world to pick his receivers. The Dolphins knew
that the key to stopping Bledsoe was to put a lot of pressure on him and
that they did. Bledsoe was sacked 4 times and threw 2 picks in an
embarrassing performance. Even when he had time, he his throws were not
arriving on target. The Bills offense went 3 and out for most of the first
half and Bledsoe finished the game with only 98 yards, completing only 10
of 25 passes.
Just like Bill Belichick had discovered last year, put an intense rush on
Bledsoe and his game goes astray. The Dolphins were able to get the most
pressure on Bledsoe that he's seen all season.
"We got pressure on Bledsoe, and that's what we needed to do,"
said Dolphins cornerback Sam Madison. "We kept him out of
rhythm."
Bledsoe, who led the NFL in passing in the first half of last season, took
a nose dive the second half when teams started to turn up the heat on him.
This year, it only took 3 games to crimp Bledsoe's style. Now the big
question is whether he came come back and be the solid quarterback he was
in the first two games this year and half of last season.
"They changed up a couple of their fronts on some of their third
downs, which is something they normally don't do," explained Bledsoe.
"So they had a good plan for us but we've got to respond in those
situations. We have to make our plays."
Henry Shutdown Again
Not only did the Fish stop the Bills air game, but Travis Henry continued
his rushing slump. Henry, who had to leave the game at the start of the
second quarter because of bruised ribs, gained only 7 yards on 5 carries.
"They are not broken," said Bills head coach Gregg Williams
after the game. "But he couldn't come back."
Henry was also the center of yet another controversial call by Williams.
The Bills had just gotten into the red zone thanks to a fumble recovery by
Takeo Spikes. Williams had been hit by Antoine Winfield and fumbled.
Spikes scooped up the ball and tore down the field 29 yards to the
Dolphins 16. On second down from the 13, the Bills sent in yet
another questionable play that may have swung the game to the Dolphins.
Henry attempted a halfback option pass that was intercepted at the goal
line by Patrick Surtain. The Bills blotched a great opportunity to get
points on the board and the Dolphins gained the momentum and took control
of the game from there.
"We really believed we had it set up for several weeks,"
defended Williams. "Travis got all kinds of penetration in his face.
We got whipped on the line of scrimmage again, got people shoved back in
his face. He probably should have just tucked it and tried to get
something out of it. - He just got hit and under threw it."
Said Bledsoe about the lack of a running game, "We've got to get it
going. There's no question, we got to run the ball better. They came in
with the goal of making us one dimensional, making us throw the ball and
when they do that we have to throw it more effectively then we did. But
we've also got to get our running game going."
Ricky Power
The Dolphins said they were going to go with Ricky Williams, using their
most potent offensive weapon and they did. Even though the Bills were
stuffing Williams for the most part in the first half, the Dolphins stuck
with their plan, unlike the Bills. The Bills wanted to have a more
run-orientated game this season, but with Henry's slump, have gone right
back to their pass-happy ways again.
Williams kept on getting the ball and eventually the Bills defense wore
out and Ricky was the key to the final touchdown drive that ate up the
clock in the process.
"I just kept hitting it up in there," described the Dolphins'
Williams. "You want an opportunity to control the game. The running
game is like a heavyweight fight. You just keep giving body blows and
hopefully you get the knockout punch."
Battle Of The Turnovers
The Bills and Dolphins defenses were battling it out to stop the offensive
guns. It appeared as if the Bills were finally gaining momentum of the war
when Spikes took over Williams' fumble. But the offense squandered that
golden opportunity and it wasn't until Clements picked off a Fiedler pass
that the Bills were finally able to score a touchdown. The offense
certainly wasn't going to do it on this night.
The Bills picked off 2 of Fiedler's passes, both by Clements. Nate had one
early in the first quarter, but once again the Bills offense didn't take
advantage of it.
Both teams turned the ball over 3 times, however the Bills gave it up
twice while in the Dolphins red zone.
| Game
Breakdown |
|
BUF |
MIA |
FIRST DOWNS
3RD-DOWN EFFICIENCY
TOTAL NET YARDS
Total Plays
Average gain
NET YARDS RUSHING
Rushes
Average Per Rush
NET YARDS PASSING
Pass Completion
Yards per pass
Times Sacked
Yards Lost To Sacks
Had Intercepted
PUNTS
Average Punt
PENALTIES
Penalty Yards
FUMBLES
Fumbles Lost
TIME OF POSSESSION |
8
1-9
118
44
2.7
41
14
2.9
77
10-26
2.6
4
21
3
7
50.0
11
84
0
0
19:10 |
23
6-14
313
73
4.3
166
44
3.8
147
16-28
5.1
1
7
2
4
43.5
4
35
1
1
40:50 |
INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Buffalo Rushing
Joe Burns 6-22, Drew Bledsoe 2-9, Travis Henry 5-7, Sam Gash 1-3.
Miami Rushing
Ricky Williams 42-153, Jay Fiedler 2-13.
Buffalo Receiving
Bobby Shaw 3-34, Eric Moulds 2-30, Josh Reed 3-27, Joe Burns 1-6, Mark
Campbell 1-1.
Miami Receiving
Randy McMichael 4-57, Chris Chambers 5-51, Derrius Thompson 3-32,
James McKnight 1-18, Ricky Williams 3-(-4).
Buffalo Passing
Drew Bledsoe 10-25-98-0-2, Travis Henry 0-1-0-0-1.
Miami Passing
Jay Fiedler 16-28-154-1-2.
Missed Field Goals
MIA Olindo Mare (2).
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